Writing, like most any hobby, can be
therapeutic. Cathartic, even. It can be used to understand one's
problems or expel them entirely. This could be why a lot of my less
inspired writing involves "demons". They serve as
embodiments of less desirable attributes that I see in myself or
others. Writing about them is a way of vicariously coping with such
things in ways that would otherwise be impossible.
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Deros drifts down from the top of the of the building to our level. His bug-eyed face
bears an expression of mock pity. My
jaw clenches, preparing to shut out whatever patronizing
statement the demon had been preparing.
It doesn't work. His weight-of-the-world voice digs
into my ears like so many self-entitled
maggots.
"What now, poor Jack?" he
sighs. "Will you try to play the hero again, or will you be a
coward and-"
He is cut off mid-sentence by a blast
of lightning. The blow sends him careening into
the side of the barn. The familiar
warmth of lightning dissipates from around my arm. I'm
tired, I'm pissed, but more than that
I'm reached the end of my patience and cannot stand a
second more of his condescending
jabber. He shakes off my attack, pulling himself back into the
air, readying a counter. I've already leaped forward, letting magic boost my speed and reach.
The distance between us disappears in
the blink of an eye and my knee buries itself in Deros's
gut with the force of a truck. The side
of the barn folds like paper as we smash through,
bouncing to a stop in the middle of the
second story loft. I come out on top with one hand
choking his neck. Unfortunately, not
tight enough to keep him from continuing to blather.
"Impressive, Jack, your power
is-"
The floorboards crack as I bring my
other hand down on his smug face.
"Shut up!" I bellow,
wide-eyed, verging on hysteria. "Shut up, shut up, shut up!"
I punctuate each cry with a savage,
satisfying strike. After the fourth blow the floor
sags as the support beam buckles. I
bring my hands together high above my head. There's a brief
moment where Deros stares upwards,
befuddled by my new found prowess. Then I bring my clenched
fists down in apologetic explanation.
The beam running beneath us shatters and sends us
plunging to the cement below. Deros
howls, more out of gall than pain, as he lands.
"Very-"
I interrupt him with an high pitched
shriek, aggravated beyond the capacity for
coherent speech simply by hearing his
voice. Spittle and gibberish spew from my mouth as I rain
heavy blows downward. Still
unsatisfied, I shove one hand in his mouth, digging my fingers into
the bloody flesh, while the other I
plant onto his pudgy face for leverage. I yank viciously. I
am rewarded with a slight pop and feel
something give. I roar and wrench my hand back again,
even harder. There's a wet, sickening
crunch as I tear off Deros's lower jaw. His howl turns
into a gurgle as his tongue is ripped
away and blood spills into his throat. I climb off of the
demon and dance away, grinning madly
and gripping the blood soaked mandible like a trophy. Deros
climbs onto his hands and knees. I can
see the hatred in his eyes but hear nothing but blissful
gurgling.
"Yes!" I howl, returning
from caveman dialect. I brandish the jaw at him. "You have no
idea how long I've been aching to do
that! Oh god, finally you will shut up! Yes!"
He raises a shaky hand to cast
something but I bring my fist down through the air like
a hammer. Chunks of wood pelt me as a
pillar of pure light explodes through the floorboards
above and slams into Deros. My brain
registers a noise but my ears report only ringing. If
Deros is screaming, I can't hear it.
The lightning bolt doesn't dissapate, but flickers through
the air like a giant Tesla coil, rooted
in Deros's twitching body. The band of superheated
plasma pulses as it pours more and more
juice into the demon. The jaw clamped in my fist pulses
along with it. I vaguely remember
Aravis saying something about blood magic, but am too elated
by the spectacle before me to care.
Finally, the jaw snaps and crumbles like charcoal, and the
massive lightning bolt fades.
Deros lay motionless in a small crater
of broken cement. I breathe heavily, keeping my
arms raised, ready for whatever
trickery he has planned. A full minute passes. Deros hasn't
moved. Possibility swells within me.
I take a cautious step forward,
watching the charred, blackened form for any signs of
motion, trying to suppress rising hope.
Surely, it would be too good to be true. Deros has
played dead once before, in the house
fire back in the city. This time, though, he's looking
pretty dead. I nudge an outstretched
hand with my foot. The blackened fingers crumble away into
ash. My gaze travels up to his face,
contorted in pain. There's no pinpricks of light in his
eyes. No sign of life. I lean a little
bit closer, peering into the dark pits, then laugh.
There aren't any eyes at all.